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Jack Bruce, bassist from legendary 1960s band Cream, dead at 71

British musician Jack Bruce, one of the top rock musicians of the late 1960s, died at his home in England on Saturday.

Jack Bruce, best known as the bassist from the 1960s group Cream, died Saturday at his home in Suffolk, England. Cream sold 35 million albums in just over two years and the band was awarded the world’s first ever platinum disc. (JANE MINGAY / The Associated Press)

By Sylvia HuiAssociated PressGregory KatzThe Associated Press

Sat., Oct. 25, 2014

LONDON—British musician Jack Bruce, best known as the bassist and vocalist of the 1960s power blues trio Cream, died Saturday at his home. He was 71.

Bruce was one of the top musicians of the late 1960s, when Cream played its unique psychedelic blues tunes to packed houses in England and the United States.

The short-lived band — widely cited as the original supergroup — were known for hits such as “I Feel Free” and “Sunshine of Your Love,” which featured Eric Clapton’s innovative guitar riffs, and Bruce’s vocals and roaring bass, backed by Ginger Baker’s explosive drumming.

Bruce enjoyed a long solo career after that, and in 2005 he reunited with former Cream bandmates for concerts in London and New York City.

Publicist Claire Singers said Saturday Bruce died at his home in Suffolk, England. A statement released by his family said “the world of music will be a poorer place without him but he lives on in his music and forever in our hearts.

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“It is with great sadness that we, Jack’s family, announce the passing of our beloved Jack: husband, father, granddad, and all round legend,” the statement said.

Cream sold 35 million albums in just over two years and the band was awarded the world’s first ever platinum disc for their double albumWheels of Fire. Bruce wrote and sang most of the band’s signature songs.

The band started out playing traditional blues tunes, but added a psychedelic tinge that brought still more popularity at the height of the flower power era.

But they broke up with little warning, at the height of their commercial success. Clapton wrote in his 2007 autobiography that the band lost its direction musically and that “any sense of unity” had disappeared.

“We were also suffering from an inability to get along,” he said. “We would just run away from one another. We never socialized together and never really shared ideas anymore.”

He was known for mixing rock, jazz and classical formats, and his songs were covered by many artists including Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie and Ella Fitzgerald.

Bruce returned to the studio around 2000 to record his solo album Shadows in the Air, which hit No. 5 on the British jazz and blues chart.

Bruce was born to musical parents in Glasgow, Scotland on May 14, 1943. His parents travelled extensively in Canada and the U.S., and the young Bruce attended 14 different schools. He finished his formal education at Bellahouston Academy and the Royal Scottish Academy of Music, to which he won a scholarship for cello and composition.

He left Scotland at the age of 16 and in 1962 joined his first important band, the influential Alexis Korner’s Blues Inc., in London. The band featured drummer Charlie Watts, who later joined the Rolling Stones.

He is survived by his wife, Margrit, four children and a granddaughter. Funeral arrangements weren’t immediately announced.

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